Keisha-Khan Y. Perry,
"The Groundings with my Sisters: Toward a Black Diasporic Feminist Agenda in the Americas"
(page 4 of 4)
Conclusion: Resisting Erasure
After the publication of the first edition of his influential text
Slave Rebellion in Brazil: The Muslim Uprising of 1835 in Bahia
(1995), João José Reis received much criticism from
scholars for his failure to mention the crucial role of African
descendant women, such as Luisa Mahim, in the urban anti-slavery revolt.
In his article, for instance, Ari Lima (2001) asks readers to name a
black woman in Brazilian history who comes immediately to mind. As I
read Lima's article, I remember the day in 2003, when I walked into a
t-shirt shop in Salvador, a majority black city in northeastern Brazil,
to purchase a gift. A t-shirt with the title "Panteras Negras (Black
Panthers)" caught my eye, but the pictures printed on it included the
portraits of Che Guevara, César Chavez, Fidel Castro, and
Zumbí. The absence of black women illustrated the local and
national collective amnesia of black women's history in Brazil—and black
women's radicalism globally. I mentioned this to the saleswoman, and she
told me, "You're right, but who would you include?" I quickly offered
the names of Angela Davis, Nanny of the Maroons, Nzinga, and other women
Black Panthers in the United States, the Caribbean, and Africa, but I
was much slower to provide a similar list of black Brazilian and other
Latin American women. As organizers of Day of the Black Woman in Bahia
in 2008 emphasized, "Women such as Maria Filipa fought for in the war
for independence in Bahia, but they are not remembered on July 2nd
[Independence Day], Zeferina, Luisa Mahim." Who are the black women
warriors of Brazil, specifically, and of Latin America, in general?
Knowledge production on the lives of black women in Brazilian history
continues to be rare, and black women have been erased from political
memories of gendered anti-racism struggles, such as the abolition
movement (Butler 1998) and the more recent struggles for policy reform in
education and health care (Santos 2007). My commitment to unburying the
political activism, writings, and legacies of black women feminists in
Latin America intensified upon this realization.
In recent years, I have begun to collect black women's feminist
writings from Latin America to organize an anthology that follows
Beverly Guy-Sheftall's Words of Fire: An Anthology of
African-American Feminist Thought (1995). No such anthology of Latin
American black feminist writings exists, and this essay begins to frame
why such an intellectual and political project is necessary. These
writings need to be written into the long history of the line of
"sisters" throughout the African diaspora who have struggled against
slavery, colonialism, and gendered racial and class oppression. As
"academic others," their contributions to feminist thought, critical
theories of race and diaspora, and black political radicalism continue
to be minimized, marginalized, or erased, despite the fact that they
have no doubt contributed to the black radical tradition and the black
feminist agenda in the Americas (James 2002; Ransby 2003). Black feminists in
Latin America are oftentimes left out of narrations of the black radical
tradition in the Americas—thus they are the "sister outsiders" of the
region. This leads me to two questions: Within black diaspora studies,
how do we begin to understand the idea and practice of a black
geographic context of feminist solidarity, and how significant are
"nations" and "regions" in building radical black political
communities?
This essay calls for an important need to document black women's
radical tradition in Latin America, specifically the scholarship and
activism grounded in feminist consciousness, diasporic identification,
and grassroots politics. An anthology of black feminist writings in
Latin America will provide a nuanced understanding of the diasporic
relationship between black women, bringing awareness of their disparate
experiences at the center of transnational solidarity. In essence, such
an intellectual and activism project represents our efforts to further
black women's politics against gendered and class-based racism in the
Americas and elsewhere. However, the challenge for African diaspora
studies remains the centrality (or the forging) of black women's
histories, experiences, and knowledge in the formation of a global black
diaspora community. This essay encourages us to rethink the relationship
between black diaspora studies and black feminist studies, for, as Asale
Angel-Ajani laments, "African diaspora studies fail women miserably,"
(2006). Moreover, it remains a challenge for black diaspora and black
feminist scholars in the U.S. to increase their knowledge of black
women's thought and praxis throughout the Americas. Engaging black
feminists in Latin America and allowing a black diasporic vision to
emerge deepens black feminism's radical possibility of global sisterhood
and the convergence of common struggles.
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